ALEXANDRIA ASSOCIATES, LTD., a Florida Limited Partnership and Anthony J. LaSala, Plaintiffs-Appellants, Cross-Appellees, v. The MITCHELL COMPANY, an Alabama General Partnership and Mitchell Equities, a Florida General Partnership, Defendants-Appellees, Cross-Appellants.
No. 92-7584.
United States Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit.
Sept. 24, 1993.
2 F.3d 598
The limited nature of the complete preemption doctrine further supports this conclusion. We have required there to be “a clearly manifested congressional intent to make state claims removable to federal court.” Beers v. North American Van Lines, Inc., 836 F.2d 910, 913 n. 3 (5th Cir.1988). We cannot find that Congress clearly intended that the Aviation Act’s preemption clause makes Anderson’s state law claim for retaliation for filing a workers’ compensation claim removable to federal court. Thus, we cannot conclude that the Aviation Act completely pre-empts Anderson’s article 8307c claim.
We therefore hold that the Aviation Act does not completely pre-empt Anderson’s article 8307c claim and that the Aviation Act does not confer federal question jurisdiction over this suit.
D
Since we have found that neither the RLA nor the Aviation Act completely preempts Anderson’s state law article 8307c claim, Anderson’s claim does not arise under federal law. Therefore, removal of this case was improper, and the district court lacked jurisdiction to hear it. Without jurisdiction, the district court had no power to render a judgment in this case. Hence, the judgment of the district court is REVERSED, and this suit is REMANDED with instructions to vacate the judgment and remand the case to the state court from which it was removed. See Jones, 931 F.2d at 1092.
WIENER, Circuit Judge:
We are called upon once again to delineate the boundaries of the D’Oench, Duhme doctrine. Plaintiffs-Appellants, Alexandria Associates, Ltd., a limited partnership, and Anthony J. LaSala, one of its general partners (jointly “Alexandria”), appeal the district court’s grant of summary judgment, dismissing their securities fraud and common law tort claims against Defendants-Appellees, The Mitchell Company, an Alabama general partnership, and Mitchell Equities, a Florida general partnership (jointly, the “Mitchells”), as barred by the D’Oench, Duhme doctrine. Concluding that D’Oench does not apply to the instant non-banking transactions, which were sales of partnership interests in real estate development partnerships, we reverse and remand.
I
FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
This case comprises four non-bank parties involved in several non-banking transactions consisting of the purchases and sales of partnership interests in real estate ventures. The essence of Alexandria’s assertions is that the Mitchells made misrepresentations regarding those sales, and that the interests sold were securities within the contemplation of the federal securities laws. The operable facts, for purposes of this appeal,1 are as follows.
The Mitchells are ordinary or general partnerships—that is, they are not limited partnerships.2 All partners are corporations,
In 1986, John Saint, president of each corporate sub-subsidiary which in some combination controlled the Mitchell partnerships, contacted LaSala in an effort to sell partnership interests in the limited partnerships owned by the Mitchells to Alexandria.4 Each of these limited partnerships had been formed to build, own, and manage a particular apartment complex. Alexandria eventually purchased the contested interests in those partnerships, making cash down payments totaling $400,000. The remaining balance of the purchase price of each interest thus acquired by Alexandria was financed with a non-recourse loan from the Mitchells secured by a mortgage on the real estate of the limited partnership in which such interest was purchased.
Alexandria intended to syndicate itself and sell shares to investors. It planned to use the proceeds to pay off the purchase loan indebtedness. But Alexandria was unable to confect the syndication, so it could not service its mortgage debts according to their tenor. When the loans fell into default, the Mitchells foreclosed. As a result, Alexandria lost its entire $400,000 investment. The foreclosures occurred in November, 1988, and Alexandria filed suit against the Mitchells in December, 1988. In March, 1992,—over three years after suit was filed and at a time shortly after Altus FSB succeeded Altus Bank—the Mitchells moved for summary judgment, contending that Alexandria’s claims were barred by the D’Oench, Duhme doctrine and its statutory counterpart,
II
STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment by “reviewing the record under the same standards which guided the district court.”6 A grant of summary judgment is proper when no genuine issue of material fact exists that would necessitate a
III
ANALYSIS
Alexandria asserts three alternative grounds to challenge the district court’s holding that D’Oench, Duhme bars their claims. First, they argue that D’Oench does not apply to non-banking transactions such as these, involving the ordinary commercial sale of interests in real estate ventures. Second, Alexandria asserts that, even assuming arguendo that D’Oench could be applicable to these types of transactions under other circumstances, D’Oench does not apply when such transactions are conducted by a third generation, non-banking subsidiary. Finally, Alexandria insists that the common law D’Oench doctrine has been preempted by FIRREA,9 and that FIRREA’s reach does not extend to transactions of the nature here involved. As we agree with Alexandria’s first contention—that D’Oench does not apply to non-banking transactions involving the ordinary commercial sale of partnership interests in real estate development ventures—we need not and therefore do not address Alexandria’s alternative arguments.10
A. Policies Underlying the D’Oench Doctrine
This court has previously noted that D’Oench is “an arguably harsh rule”11 that is “expansive and perhaps startling in its severity.”12 We have applied D’Oench to bar, inter alia, claims of fraud under the federal securities law,13 and we have allowed successors in interest to the federal bank regulatory agencies to invoke the protections of D’Oench.14 The essence of these protections is that D’Oench bars enforcement of “agreements” against federal banking agencies unless those agreements have been approved contemporaneously by the bank’s board or loan committee and recorded in the bank’s written records.15
The Supreme Court in Langley v. FDIC16 voiced a twofold justification for invoking the “arguably harsh” bar of D’Oench. The Langley Court found the recordation requirement justified because it allows federal and state bank examiners to rely exclusively on the bank’s records in evaluating the worth of the bank’s assets.17 The Court found justification for the approval requirement in its assurance of “mature consideration of unusual loan transactions by senior bank officials.”18 We have articulated a third justification for D’Oench: that, among the bank’s borrowers, creditors, and depositors, the borrowers are the ones who should bear the risk
B. D’Oench and Non-banking Transactions
The consistent focus of D’Oench’s protection has always been on banking transactions engaged in by federally insured institutions.20 We have construed the concept of banking transactions broadly, ranging from the typical loan agreement21 to promises to lend.22 In so doing, however, we have recognized that the D’Oench doctrine is not transactionally infinite: It is not a limitless, per se guarantee of victory by federal banking agencies and their successors in interest.23
In Thigpen v. Sparks24 we defined one limit of the D’Oench doctrine which is particularly germane to the instant appeal. There the appellant, Sparks, purchased a wholly owned trust company from BancTexas. The chairman of BancTexas falsely represented to Sparks that the trust company’s charter had been maintained “in good standing” without interruption. Yet when Sparks eventually attempted to sell the trust company he found that he could not because its charter had been revoked temporarily for non-payment of franchise taxes. He therefore sued BancTexas under a breach of warranty claim. Like Altus Bank here, BancTexas became insolvent during the pendency of the suit, and the FDIC was appointed receiver. But in Thigpen it was the FDIC that moved for and was granted summary judgment on the theory that Sparks’ claim was an “agreement” barred under the FIRREA provision that incorporated the statutory version of the D’Oench doctrine.25
Reversing the district court in Thigpen, we concluded that
Thigpen and the policies underlying the D’Oench doctrine mandate a like result in the present case. The Mitchells were engaged in the ordinary commercial sale of non-bank assets—partnership interests in real estate development ventures. These sales assuredly were non-banking transactions; banks simply do not engage in the sale of partnership interests in real estate development ventures in the ordinary course of banking business.30 The fact that these were sales by a third generation non-banking subsidiary, thereby implicating the jurisprudential version of the D’Oench doctrine, fails to distinguish this case from Thigpen.31
Moreover, even if we assume for the sake of this discussion that FIRREA allows the extension of the jurisprudential version of the D’Oench doctrine beyond the limits of the statutory one,32 we discern no reason to do so in the present case.33 The purposes of neither the recordation nor approval requirements of D’Oench would be furthered by including non-banking transactions within the aegis of the doctrine. The substantial volume of information regarding areas of commerce outside the bank examiners’ expertise or cognizance, generated day by day in myriad non-banking transactions, would simply overwhelm the bank’s officers and directors; besides, such information would not be likely to aid the examiners in evaluating miscellaneous non-banking assets of the troubled bank. Requiring bank boards or loan committees to consider, approve, and record every transaction entered into by a bank—and especially by entities held by the bank as investments or subsidiaries—would make virtually impossible the performance by officers and directors of their upper level management and policymaking functions, not the least of which is deciding constantly whether and on what terms to grant loans.
Finally, we seriously question whether a third party involved in a non-banking transaction—particularly a transaction with subsidiaries of a subsidiary such as the ones at issue here—would be in a better position than depositors or creditors of that bank to protect themselves by mandating board consideration and recordation in the bank’s minutes. Commercial expectations simply do not include the belief that every agreement with a bank (much less with its sub-sub-subsidiaries) must be scrutinized, approved, and recorded by the bank’s executive committee or board.34
IV
CONCLUSION
The Mitchells’ effort to invoke D’Oench as a bar to any judicial consideration whether they engaged in fraud in connection with the
REVERSED and REMANDED.
Michael Wallace, Charles D. Porter, E. Clifton Hodge, Jr., Phelps Dunbar, Jackson, MS, for appellants.
Tere R. Steel, Ronald G. Peresich, Page, Mannino & Peresich, Biloxi, MS, for appellees.
